The Jat community held the Rashtriya Jat Shatabdi Sammelan in Pushkar to mark 100 years of organizing for farmers' rights. Thousands attended from north and other parts of India. Yudhveer Singh, general-secretary of the Akhil Bhartiya Jat Mahasabha, said, "We are Ram’s followers. Jai Shri Ram is not our slogan." He said Jats were true devotees of Ram, but the country is led by those using "Jai Shri Ram" as a slogan. Singh highlighted Jat political decline despite their large population in northern India. "More than 3 lakh Jat youth have got jobs due to reservation in Rajasthan," he said, calling on leaders to unite and urge Home Minister Amit Shah to keep his 2017 promise on reservation. Organiser Prem Singh Sihag noted that since Independence, no Jat leader holds a Cabinet post, unlike before. Farmer leader Pushpendra Singh described Jats as the largest caste group in north India but said they face systematic suppression. He pointed out efforts to divide Jats from other communities in Haryana and said their political dominance has fallen like other caste groups in India. The conference focused on building strong alliances with Gurjars, Bishnois, Muslims, Meghwals, Meenas, and Sikhs to increase political power. Joint events with the Gurjar community also took place, reviving old farming community coalitions like Ajgar. Leaders stressed past unity brought successes like the defeat of the BJP’s agricultural laws. Khokhar, secretary of the Jat Mahasabha, said other communities like Kurmis, Marathas, and Yadavs want to join these efforts. Plans for future conferences are underway to deepen cooperation and strengthen the community socially and politically.